Historical Experience

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A01=David Carr
anti-Christ
Author_David Carr
Avowed Nietzschean
Beginning Middle End Structure
Category=NHA
Category=NHAH
Category=QDTM
continental philosophy
Destiny
Dilthey
embodiment
embodiment in history
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Erlebnis
Essential Human Trait
Eternal Recurrence
experience
Face To Face
Follow
Fukuyama
Heidegger
Hindsight
Historical Apriori
Historical Beings
Historical events
historicity
History and Theory
Hold
Husserl
Husserl's Late Work
Husserl’s Late Work
Inclined
intersubjectivity research
Koselleck
Lebenswelt
Mankind
Means End Structure
memory
Merleau-Ponty
narrative
narrative theory
phenomenological method
phenomenology
phenomenology of historical experience
Philosophical approaches
Postwar
Ricoeur
Superimposed
Teleological View
Teleology
temporality studies
Theodicy
Timeless
Transcendental Illusion
Und
Wo

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367752989
  • Weight: 260g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Sep 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This volume brings together a collection of recent essays on the philosophy and theory of history.

This is a field of lively interdisciplinary discussion and research, to which historians, philosophers and theorists of culture and literature have contributed. The author is a philosopher by training, and his inspiration comes primarily from the continental-phenomenological tradition. Thus the influence of Husserl, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty and Ricoeur can be discerned here. This background opens up a unique perspective on the issues under discussion. Phenomenology differs from other philosophical approaches, like metaphysics and epistemology. Phenomenology asks, of anything that exists or may exist: how is it given, how does it enter our experience, what is our experience of it like? Very broadly we can say: phenomenology is about experience. At first glance, this approach may seem ill-suited to history. In our language, “history” usually means either 1) what happened, i.e. past events, or 2) our knowledge of what happened. We can’t experience past events, and whatever knowledge we have of them must come from other sources—memory, testimony, physical traces. But the author maintains that we actually do experience historical events, and these essays explain how this is so.

Sitting at the intersection of philosophy and history, and divided into three parts—Historicity, Narrative, and Time, Teleology and History, and Embodiment and Experience—this is the ideal volume for those interested in experience from a philosophical and historical perspective.

David Carr is Charles Howard Candler Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Emory University, US and Lecturer of Philosophy at the New School for Social Research. He is the author of Phenomenology and the Problem of History (1974, reissued in 2009); Time, Narrative and History (1986); Interpreting Husserl (1987); The Paradox of Subjectivity (1999), and Experience and History (2014).

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